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SCREENLAND
Puzzle fans attention: J. C. Long, Charles Voutmunn, Mrs. J. E. f Fields, Viola Javins, Alvin Smith Mrs. John ,
Gillies Jacob Braucher, each won sedans in our last auto puzzles. Over 800 pnzes awarded in one year. Over $11,000.00 in prizes paid by.us in October, 1928. In next few months will award between 300 and 400 prizes through our puzzles. Here's the new ono for you.
FIND THE "DIFFERENT" AUTO
The cars in the oval all look exactly alike at first glance. They. are not all alike One is different from all the others. There is a real difference. Something is purposely left off all the other cars but this one. The difference Ty be in the fenders, bumper, nameplate, radiator or. top. The one that 'different" is the real Buick Sedan I am giving away in addition to three other cars in my great friendship advertising campaign. You may be the one who will find it
AND WIN BUICK SEDAN OR $1800.00 CASH
4 sedans and 28 other prizes totaling over $5,000 00 32 prizes and duplicate prizes paid in case of ties. If you can find the "different" auto you may be the one to get this great prize.
Certificate for $480.00 to apply on srrand prize sent immediately a8 below if you find the "different car.
Immediate quick action-no delay-we Bend certificate for .$480 )W to add Ito the lirot orizc at once f you win and directions for getting Huick beoan. We upend over $160,000.00 this way each year to advertise our Products. NO MORE PUZZLES TO SOLVE. Noilsts of words to makeor write )r any other puzzles. This is all. Everyone rewarded if activelyinter
Nocost or obligation. Nothing to buy i ;he number of the differ
. later, or eve
JuBtf send "the" number of the" "different ,' auto in a letter or on a post card. That's all. send no money. DEPT. 502 500 N. Dearborn St., Chicago, III.
Notice to Mail Subscribers
Send Request for Any Change of Address on Your Screenland Subscription Direct to Publication Office
Considerable delay has been experienced in many cases due to sending the notice for a change in address to the agent. Notifying the Subscription Department, Screenland, 49 West 45th St., New York, N. Y., before the 15th of the month, will insure the receipt of the next issue at your new address.
A daring book by ElinorvGlyn--brimful of plain truths, unashamed facts, frank discussions, and intimate secrets of love and marriage. Ruined romances and blasted marriages are too often due to ignorance of vital questions which are discussed freely in this amazingly frank book which concerns the most intimate relations of men and women.
It contains EVERYTHING the curious
inexperienced yonth and the more mature might want to know, from the first awakening of youthful love to the full flowering of the grand passion; how to win love, hold love, restore love; how to charm, fascinate, captivate: mistakes,, marriage, birth control: ; wisdom, warnings, vamping; petting, honeymooning, mating; winning whom vou want— deception, mhdelity, outwitting "third party," etc.
Intimate Advice to the Lovelorn
An endless source of intimate, intriguing information— in the frank words of the present day youth, answering many a question yon might even hesitate to ask your closest friends— anwers to a bride, ana many others, which of course cannot be mentioned here. Simply priceless Secrets, that will change your loneliness to happiness, your longings to Send money order or stamps for $1.88 or pay $2 to your postman on deliyery.
Educator Press
Dept. G-48
(9 Park Row,
New York City
In New York
(Continued from page 75)
She came east to for the Tiffany-Stahl Me" — Alberta being "Me" is — just me, I
do talking sequences picture, "Molly and the "Molly," while guess. But it turned
out to be rather a hectic trip for Alberta. Besides having to work very hard, she heard soon after her arrival here that her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Preston, had been injured in an automobile accident. She wanted to dash right back to California but — "the picture must go on" — and besides her mother wired her not to worry, that their injuries were not serious enough to warrant bringing Alberta back. The next thing — well, it's a long story. The little star was the fiance of William Lait, Jr., a millionaire of Pittsburgh and Pasadena. The wedding was scheduled for an early date, to take place in Mr. Lait's home in Pasadena. The young man planned a gorgeous home for Alberta in Beverly Hills, gave her a ten-carat engagement ring and everything was all set.
Then came the trip to Manhattan for "Molly and Me." Mr. Lait kept the distance wires busy telephoning his every day.
telephoned one day and found her He telephoned the next night and Alberta was out. On the third evening, he found her in, and upon inquiring where she has been the other two evenings, she told him that she had gone to some of the night-clubs with some of her New York friends. He became angry because she had promised not to go anywhere with anyone, and the wires burned with the heated discussion that ensued between the two. Alberta became just as angry, and broke her engagement!
Before she left New York she intimated that she might surprise everybody by announcing her engagement to Charles Feldman, prominent attorney of Hollywood, immediately upon her return to the You just can't keep up with these movie kids!
Sent sealed in plain wrapper. Books sent care of General Delivery must be prepaid.
long fiance
He out. again
Coast, cute
'OTE
This book will not be sold to anyone below 18. State age when ordering.
Tim McCoy was in our midst — minus that sombrero and those chaps, but with all his western charm intact. Colonel Tim is a great guy. You'd like him. Handsome in a big, bronze, outdoor way; yet very well-groomed and tailored. He's a curious combination of naivete and worldliness: sometimes a sophisticate, often an enthusiastic small boy. (He'll hate me for that last crack)! What I mean is, he's interesting, quite apart from any claim to fame his western pictures have brought him.
He sailed for Europe to join his wife and the McCoy children, who are in school in France. Due to the seeming slump in the vogue of 'westerns,' he didn't know just what his future film plans would be. If you ask me — oh, go ahead and ask! — Colonel Tim McCoy could make a hit as a leading man even if he left his horse outside. That's how good I think he is!
% # ^
Belle Bennett is a sweet woman. I know what you're going to say! But when I say 'sweet' I don't mean sticky. Miss Bennett is genuinely charming. Her sweetness is not staged. She's a real person — and one of our finest actresses.
She was in New York briefly for the first time in years to make, at the R.C.A. Sound Studio, dialogue scenes for "Molly and Me" — yeS; the same picture Alberta Vaughn is in. Belle had just finished her